Welcome to the American Go Association. The Interactive Way To Go. Front Page. KGS Go Server. Go Bibliography by Subject. This is the version of the go bibliography that's organized by subject. You should read absolutely nothing into the order into which books are listed within each subject. Beginners' Books. This section contains books that are designed either to introduce you to the game or to be the second book that you read once you've learned the rules. If you're at that stage of the game, the version of the bibliography organized by difficulty gives advice about which book to choose. General Principles. This section contains books that aren't about one specific aspect of the game. The Opening and Joseki. Cosmic Go could also be listed here.
Tesuji. Life and Death. The Middle Game. The Endgame. Handicap Go. Collections of Games. General collections of problems. These are collections of problems that aren't specific to one aspect of the game. Other Books. The Game of Go: a Programmer's Perspective - Need for Air. The game of go is very interesting from an AI programmer’s point of view, because of how difficult it is to make a computer compete against a strong human and how researchers approached the problem. Paradoxically, the use of randomly played games has helped computers get much stronger. by oblivionz Game of Go: a (very) brief overview Go is wildly popular in Asia but little known in the Western world. Similar to Chess, it is a strategy game where two players take turn placing stones on a board.
The key differences between these two are: In Go, the board starts empty, and you add stones at each turn whereas in chess you start with an army and try to destroy the other oneThe rules are much simpler in Go than in Chess: in particular there is only one type of stone while Chess uses six different pieces I really encourage you to check it out, you can learn to play here and play here. Compexity, comparison to chess Game-tree complexity: there are about 10123 possible games in Chess. 欣文の囲碁世界 | Xinwen’s Baduk Life.